Re: 10.5" Barrel suggestions.
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Postal0311</div><div class="ubbcode-body">I am going to recommend against Noveske.
Having owned several SBR uppers, and some of those had stainless match barrels or N4 uppers, etc, I think that a lightweight chromed barrel is best for the SBR.
First a SBR is best employed like a longer ranged SMG. Placing large optics and match barrels on them does work, but in the end is kinda silly. A chrome lined barrel will be accurate enough for fast short to medium ranged fighting, and that is what the SBR will be best at.
Second, SBRs are hard on barrels, bolts, etc. Expect shorter parts life, potentially reduced reliability, shorter barrel life, etc. IIRC the Navy figured the lifespan on a MK18 was about 5000 rounds. Suppressor use will be harder on a gun, full auto too. On these short guns the gas port on the barrel erode fast. If you are going to be shooting full auto, some stainless barrels will not survive long.
Third, weight. With lights, optics, accessories, our AR15s become fat pigs fast. Adding 5-10 oz on the barrel is noticeable. Even something like a Noveske N4 barrel (same weight when 16 in as compared to a M4 barrel, however the weight is mostly under the handguards), when chopped to 10.5 will be heavier then a chopped M4 barrel. I would recommend keeping a SBR light and fast.
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Noveske double chrome lines their barrels to the same thickness as that of a SAW barrel. So then a Noveske would be the best choice.
The weight you are speaking of is very negligible if at all.
Also, every Noveske barrel I have owned has been sub MOA, even the chrome lined barrels. Now I understand that most of these SBRs are going to be shot within 200 yards, but would you rather have a gun capable of 2 or 4 inches at that distance?
Noveske will be your BEST choice period. Go with a chrome lined, and if you want a hell of a deal get their MK18 upper.
Up to you what optics you want to run on it; it all depends on the job that you need to do. If you want to just shoot paper as fast as you can then a small red dot would be fine. If you actually need to ID targets, then you may need some magnification, either a red dot magnifier or a good 1-4x scope would work well and save weight.
http://noveskerifleworks.com/cgi-bin/imc...ce=&status=